The history of mid-engined Corvette concepts is almost as old as the car itself, but even more colorful. Once the performance and racing potential of the ‘Vette was unleashed by its father, Zora Arkus Duntov, ambitious developments intended for the race track, Futurama, or the front pages of buff books speculating about the coming mid-engined production Corvette have never ended.
Duntov is shown here, proudly posing with his 1959 CERV (Chevrolet Engineering Research Vehicle) I, clearly a racing-oriented concept intended to test advanced designs and components for future use. The CERV’s independent rear suspension was adapted to the 1963 Corvette. It’s 350 hp 283 CI V8 featured aluminum block and heads, and fuel injection. A grand start to a long series of exciting Corvettes, even if they never made it into production. (Read More…)

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VA Terrapin - OneAlpha and Summicron, I thought most of us are here to read about cars, not have racial insults thrust upon us, especially in articles...
RobertRyan - No it was fairly lightweight unit and it had no handling issues. Drag yes, but not handling issues.
DeadWeight - My 8 has been tied as the most reliable car I’ve ever owned, and I drive it year round, in summer and in snow. The failure...
Summicron - “Only in America.” Well… yeah. Where else was private aircraft manufacturing ever big enough to be a target?
MRF 95 T-Bird - Agreed. Here in NYC the Parks dept has been using a vehicle similar to these from Smith electric. Far more...
Robert Gordon - Discovery I and II use the LT230 transfer box (LT stands for Leyland Transmissions – a comforting thought)...
sunridge place - My take…they used to over-report production in North America with production #’s by plant and model....
sunridge place - 28 Yep…happens here in the US often. Ever looked at Nissan’s sales in the US? http://www.goodcarbadcar.ne...
wmba - “Particularly poor example” ,”Industry doing fine to this day”? Not like it was. Read Plane and Pilot 1970 to 1975 to see the amazing...
NMGOM - Yes. If I chose to have a Bugatti Veyron that gets 8 mpg, but only drive it 50 miles twice a month, why should I get taxed...